Charcoal into soil ?

Thomiq

Member
Hello guys. Browsing on google I found this interesting article:
Using Charcoal to Make Soil Into Black Gold

Scientists show a way to improve soil quality with ''biochar.'' Transcript of radio broadcast:


This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

In South America, the fertile soil of the Amazon River basin in Brazil is known as "black gold." Scientists found that the secret to this rich soil was charcoal. Tribal people made it from animal bones and tree bark. They mixed the charcoal with the soil about one thousand five hundred years ago.

Now, scientists in the United States have done a modern demonstration. They say charcoal fertilization offers a revolutionary way to improve soil quality for hundreds or even thousands of years.

Mingxin Guo and his team at Delaware State University heated tree leaves, corn stalks, small pieces of wood and poultry waste into "biochar." They reported their findings at a recent meeting of the American Chemical Society in New Orleans.

Biochar could be good news for farmers with poor soil and hungry populations to feed. Professor Guo says it could even help against global warming. Intensive farming and overuse of chemical fertilizer releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Biochar does the opposite, he says: it traps carbon in the ground.

The researchers planted winter wheat in containers of soil in a greenhouse -- some with biochar, some without. Professor Guo says the wheat grew much better in the pots with biochar. The soil was amended with two percent charcoal. But he says even a one percent treatment would increase productivity.

The results demonstrated that biochar can increase organic matter in soil. Loss of nutrients in soil is an increasing problem worldwide as farmers try to grow more food for expanding populations.

Soils with less than three percent organic matter are generally poor and dense and unable to hold enough water and nutrients. Adding compost and animal manure and leaving crop wastes in fields has only a limited effect. The scientists say these added organic materials quickly break down into carbon dioxide.

Next the team will carry out a five-year study of biochar with spinach, green peppers and tomatoes.

Mingxin Guo says he learned about the "black gold" in Brazil from a magazine story. He explains that it was discovered in the jungle, in the area where waters flow to the Amazon, in the nineteen sixties. But it was not until recent years that scientists began to bring public attention to it.

And that’s the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. For more of our reports, go to voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Jim Tedder.
I can't actually understand it, because my english is not very good. Is that biochar is simple charcoal which can be bought in supermarkets ? Then I just grind it and add to soil ? Maybe you tried this stuff. Is this not helpful for plants that we like to grow ? :)

Is this biochar works somethin like "holding nutrients" inside ?

Sorry if it would look like bad thread, I am just curious about it ;-)
 

Jack Harer

Well-Known Member
www.biochar-international.org

Bio-Char has been a key component of my soil mixes for a good while now. you can also google Terra Preta. That's how I found out about it. There was a documentary on it on Discovery. It's really remarkable stuff. It just goes to show how much modern man has forgotten that the ancients knew!!! I use it in my outdoor veggie/pepper garden as well. The environmental impact this stuff could have is amazing, and could help solve the global warming problem if we'd ever get smart enough to start utilizing it on a global scale. That, and legalizing the cultivation and useage of cannabis (hemp). Both would heal our planet.

You say your english isn't so good. Looks pretty good to me? Where are ya?

Near as I can figure, aside from sequestering the carbon, the particles of charcoal create an incredible environment for the micro herd in the soil. The surface area of activated charcoal is immense what with all the minute cracks and crevasses. The NPK of whatever biomass you use to create the char is retained. The soil becomes a sustainable resource. I can reuse all my soils time and time again. It keeps getting better with use.

The first stuff I used was found at an outdoor camping supply store in the form of "lump" or hardwood charcoal. Not the Kingsford briquets, but it looks like pieces of burned log. you gotta crush it up pretty well, to about the size and consistency of small aquarium pea gravel (and MAN is that a bitch!!). I also use a lot of ground or milled pieces of old broken terra cotta flower pots. Again, you have to get them to a small size by crushing them or have them milled. I get my broken shards from the local nursery. They always have broken pots they just throw out.
 

Thomiq

Member
Thank you alot for the website.

I don't really worry about crushing it, because I have DIY machine for gunpowder production called ballmill. I just crush some charcoal with hammer and put it in ballmill for like 12 hours, then I have charcoal powder :). As I can understand powder is best to use ? Sorry I am totally newbie in this new thing. I'll read some info on website.
 

Jack Harer

Well-Known Member
Not really POWDER, per se, but it will get dusty. Pieces about the size of an MJ bean are about ideal as I can figure it. I'm jealous as all hell. I gotta pay someone to mill mine. What kind of machine ya got and how much was it? How hard a material will it mill?
 

Thomiq

Member
You can easily make one yourself. I used old washing machine motor to build mine. Of course you need to spend some time and money. I built it because I am pyro maniac, but looks like it will help for plants either :)).

Here's a quick tutorial for building one:
http://tutorialtub.com/info/building-a-ball-mill-for-grinding-chemicals

If you interested in it, you should look in the internet for other methods. There is very simple ballmills to make, and you don't need to grind charcoal into powder.

I mill sulphur, charcoal, nitrates. I don't know how to calculate mesh, but it's usually very fine powder.
 

Thomiq

Member
Of course I know about rocketry, but I never built one myself. My specialization is high explosives (like cyclonite, ammonium nitrate and TNT) and ten meter craters :D.

Well but lets discuss about improving soil with charcoal in this thread. I think there should be some offtopic forums in this website if you want to discuss this stuff :).
 

woodsmaneh!

Well-Known Member
Looks very interesting and the concentrations are very low so that must be key to using it, don't use too much. Great info, thank's
 

canefan

Well-Known Member
I have been using this now for the last 5 years on the farm and the past year now in my grow, great results. Living in Costa Rica and not having all the things you can run down to the store for, it has been a God send to me. Plants grow much more lushly and with fewer suppliments to the soil in watering. There are downsides to this also, be they minor. First off it will cut down on the worm population initially, but they will come back in greater numbers. If your soil retains water well now, it will hold more with the biochar, but it will also draw the water to the biochar from the soil until it is saturated.
From my experience you want the majority of your biochar about the size of peas with lots of smaller particles in as well. The biochar takes about a month or two for the benefits to appear in total, then you will see a large difference. I still haven't found the perfect amount to apply in the soil but so far am running about 1 gallon of biochar per 10 gallons of soil. Some plants on the farm, ornamentals have larger amounts mixed in their beds with no ill effects.
Anyone that desires other results with this please PM and I will be happy to discuss what else I have found about this wonderful ancient growing aide.
Happy Growing
 

Thomiq

Member
Hey. Thanks for info.

Canefan, do you produce biochar yourself ? I can't really get, if I can just grind simple charcoal and put it in soil, or I have to cook vegetation and only then I'll have real biochar.
 

Joedank

Well-Known Member
i dont add enough i am going for the 10-1 ratio thanks! great info... have you heard about soaking your biochar in a 600ppm nute solution letting it dry rinse then dry then crush?? time release ferts! i will try to find the link.
 

Jack Harer

Well-Known Member
Hey. Thanks for info.

Canefan, do you produce biochar yourself ? I can't really get, if I can just grind simple charcoal and put it in soil, or I have to cook vegetation and only then I'll have real biochar.
If you're gonna do that, be sure and get "lump" or hardwood charcoal (it looks like burned pieces of logs rather than square briquets) That is closer to bio char. True char is produced in the absence of oxygen either by pyrolization or gassification rather than combustion. Producing your own biochar isn't really feasable for a lot of people.
 

Thomiq

Member
i dont add enough i am going for the 10-1 ratio thanks! great info... have you heard about soaking your biochar in a 600ppm nute solution letting it dry rinse then dry then crush?? time release ferts! i will try to find the link.
Yes, I heard that. I would certainly do that, because I think that rain flushes my fertilizer outdoors. I am using BioBizz Bio Grow (and Bio Bloom), and this summer is fkin strange. Very wet. Sun shines, BOOM, storm, after 1 hour sun shines again. This summer I probably needed to water my plants two or three times. I added some high-phosphorus bat-guano above my autoflowering plants. Maybe rain will not flush'em.

If you're gonna do that, be sure and get "lump" or hardwood charcoal (it looks like burned pieces of logs rather than square briquets) That is closer to bio char. True char is produced in the absence of oxygen either by pyrolization or gassification rather than combustion. Producing your own biochar isn't really feasable for a lot of people.
Jack Harrer - something like this ? http://www.firepit-and-grilling-guru.com/lump-charcoal.html
 
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